Oyin Sangoyomi ’23’s First Novel Is Set in Medieval West Africa
‘Masquerade’ draws from both Nigerian and Greek mythology
‘Masquerade’ draws from both Nigerian and Greek mythology
Previously Lieberman halted construction at a Holocaust death camp in Poland
Moe builds with wild “urban salvaged” trees that weren’t planted as lumber
Chao seeks to build a movement around better youth mental health
The Tigers’ star was promoted from the G League
In ‘Beatrice’s Last Smile,’ the historian tackles the West between 200 and 1400 A.D.
‘Ikigai is a great example of starting the design process with understanding a need’
Freeth uses personality testing to help people better understand themselves and others
‘I loved the mission I was involved in,’ Porter says
Six months into the job, Cheng was covering COVID from Bejing
“There’s something about ‘NYAD’ that empowered me to be myself”
The two recently released their first full EP
In his new book, Shtulman explains that imagination is a learned skill, not an inborn trait
Started this year, the Strother School aims to counteract the effects of the information economy
When the war began, Hay’s Sunflower Community pivoted from aid for orphans to wartime relief
“I can say to my kids, ‘I did this today and it changed someone else’s life’”
Meister has championed photographers in her roles at MoMA and Aperture
In her new book, Cooper analyzes Augustine’s mother, concubine, and fiance
Carving their own space in the theater industry, these alumni founded Cellunova to “tackle social challenges”
“We wanted to send a message of hope, letting Ukrainians know that the world scientific community is behind them”
Ozminkowski is drawing on his philosophy major for Calypso — an event he describes as pure escapism
Tang was in the first cohort of Princeton’s experimental Integrated Science Curriculum
Armed with a spreadsheet and maps, Morera and her husband are on a cross-country mission
‘I think it shows you that it is OK to be messy because life is messy’